The Unique Nature of Public Stigma toward Nonmedical Prescription Opioid Use and Dependence: A National Study

2020 
BACKGROUND AND AIMS: Our ability to combat the opioid epidemic depends, in part, on dismantling the stigma that surrounds drug use. However, this epidemic has been unique, and to date, we have not understood the nature of public prejudices associated with it. Here, we examine the nature and magnitude of public stigma toward prescription opioid use disorder (OUD) using the only nationally representative data available on this topic. DESIGN: General Social Survey (GSS), a cross-sectional, nationally representative survey of public attitudes. SETTING: United States of America, 2018. PARTICIPANTS/CASES: A total of 1,169 U.S. residents recruited using a probability sample. MEASUREMENTS: Respondents completed a vignette-based survey experiment to assess public stigma toward people who develop OUD following prescription of opioid analgesics. This condition is compared with depression, schizophrenia, alcohol use disorder (AUD), and subclinical distress using multivariable logistic or linear regression. FINDINGS: Adjusting for covariates (e.g., race, age, gender), U.S. residents were significantly more likely to label symptoms of OUD a physical illness (73%, CI 66-80%; P<.001) relative to all other conditions, and less likely to label OUD a mental illness (40%, CI 32-48%; P<.001). OUD was significantly less likely to be attributed to bad character (37%, CI 30-44%; P<.001) or poor upbringing (17%, CI 12-23%; P<.001) compared with AUD. Nonetheless, perceptions of competence associated with OUD (e.g., ability to manage money; 41%, CI 33-49%; P<.01) were lower than AUD, depression, and subclinical distress. Moreover, willingness to socially exclude people with OUD was very high (e.g., 76% of respondents do not want to work with a person with OUD), paralleling findings on traditional targets of strong stigma (i.e., AUD and schizophrenia). CONCLUSIONS: US residents do not typically hold people with prescription opioid use disorder responsible for their addiction, but they do express high levels of willingness to subject them to social exclusion.
    • Correction
    • Source
    • Cite
    • Save
    • Machine Reading By IdeaReader
    25
    References
    8
    Citations
    NaN
    KQI
    []